The pace of changes here tends to have
an inverse correlation to the number and size of other web projects I
am working on. (Lately, that means the site has barely changed in a
year! Openlaw/DVD has,
though, and Chilling Effects is picking up steam.)

I developed and now coordinate the Berkman Center's Openlaw project, bringing
the model of open source and free software development to legal argument
in the public interest. Openlaw connects lawyers and non-lawyers to
develop arguments, strategies, and amicus briefs in important
cases. In the
Openlaw/DVD forum,
we recently filed an amicus
brief in Universal v.
Reimerdes, one of the first cases testing the anticircumvention
provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The Openlaw
participants' brief argued that the DeCSS program, and particularly
hyperlinks to
it, were protected under the First Amendment.

Programming: I've been working with Perl scripts, CGI, and a bit of PHP
lately. Check out the Annotation
Engine or track books on Amazon with bibliotrack.com. Sometimes the
programming even intersects with law -- try the Lawcite UDRP research
tool if you're researching cases in ICANN's domain name dispute resolution
process.